Anonymous ID: 6d17b6 Nov. 18, 2018, 4:29 p.m. No.3955008   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>5015 >>5182 >>5521

>>3951968 (pb) The Roth puppet wants a European army, meaning the Roths want it. They are losing and desperate. This proposed army is too little, too late. It is not going to save them. He and Merkel are both going to be out of power shortly.

 

The insult is off the charts to list the US as an enemy to be guarded against. Strutting little hook nosed bastard.

 

He is proposing to unite the German & French military really, then force the other EU nations to be part of it. With French nukes as the unstated backbone of the force. He is insane if he thinks the Russians would allow a German army to be part of an autonomous, nuclear armed force (as opposed to US dominated NATO).

Anonymous ID: 6d17b6 Nov. 18, 2018, 5:04 p.m. No.3955425   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun

>>3955390

https://www.military.com/daily-news/2018/06/20/blue-new-orange-guantanamo-preps-new-prisoners.html

Blue Is the New Orange as Guantanamo Preps for New Prisoners

 

20 Jun 2018

Miami Herald | By Carol Rosenberg

 

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVY BASE, Cuba – Earlier this month, in a drill shrouded in secrecy, prison guards practiced for something that hasn't actually happened at Guantanamo in a decade. They rehearsed receiving a new war-on-terror detainee.

 

Medical evaluation? Check. Notification of the International Red Cross? Check. Assignment to a cell? Check. Security and more security. Gone are the iconic orange uniforms that made Camp X-Ray infamous. The man who played the role of new captive wore white.

 

Navy Rear Adm. John Ring, the prison commander, says he hasn't gotten any word that new prisoners are coming. But since President Donald Trump signed an order keeping the prison open, Ring's staff is now preparing for what spokeswoman Navy Cmdr. Anne Leanos calls an "enduring mission."

 

"I have not been told we're getting new people. I have no order to receive new people. I've been asked some hypothetical questions about capacities and things like that, but we are not imminently expecting anybody," Ring told reporters in early June.

 

Guantanamo today has 40 prisoners and a staff of 1,800 troops and civilians. With the maximum-security Camp 5 prison just reopened, after a cellblock was remade into a clinic and mental health ward, the detention center can now take in another 40 men.

 

One wrinkle is that any new detainees are likely to be members of the Islamic State, not al-Qaida. And while some people see ISIS as offshoot of al-Qaida, the militant movements are not allies and have vastly different aims.

 

"Unless we got some al-Qaida from Afghanistan, which is possible, most of the conversation is about Syria, and most of those guys, I understand, are ISIS," said Ring, who doesn't decide who comes and goes from Guantanamo. "So it's possible we could get folks from either place."

 

Any new prisoner would be the first to arrive at Guantanamo since the CIA delivered an Afghan "high-value detainee" in March 2008. That was years before the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and Syria declared its worldwide caliphate, invaded and controlled a huge swath of Iraq and Syria and released a series of brutal videotaped killings of captives in orange jumpsuits.

 

Al-Qaida has "a different ideology" than ISIS, says Leanos, the prison spokeswoman. Besides, after more than a decade in military detention, there's also a "different mentality" among the captives – who are profiled as al-Qaida members or affiliates – and have come to understand Guantanamo prison's incentive system says the admiral's cultural adviser who is only identified with one name, Zaki. Captives who follow the guards' commands get to live communally, pray and eat in groups, take art, language and gardening classes and read more books, for example.

 

"If suspected ISIS fighters are transferred to Guantanamo I would expect that a legal challenge to their detention would be filed within days if not hours of their arrival," said Wells Dixon of the Center for Constitutional Rights, which has been at the forefront of representing an….

(long & fascinating article continues)

Anonymous ID: 6d17b6 Nov. 18, 2018, 5:08 p.m. No.3955462   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>5497

>>3955413

My current philosophy on that is "best effort". Usually most of them, sometimes miss a few. Ever get up to take a pee, and come back to the bread, and jump right in?

 

Same philosophy with harvesting memes. It just takes too fucking much time to review the entire memes bread to make sure I don't post a duplicate. Having duplicates is a small price to pay for being able to spend time on the chan 12+ hours a day, AND serving the community by meming and harvesting, AND taking care of fam.

That's the best you're going to get out of me. It's a comprimise.

Need I say fuck you?

Nah. But lay off, OK?

Anonymous ID: 6d17b6 Nov. 18, 2018, 5:11 p.m. No.3955497   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>5511 >>5547 >>5554

>>3955462

>>3955413

P.S. I don't tell you how to do your job, and why should you tell me how to do mine?

Anons contribute each in their own way according to their own skills, strengths, weaknesses, preferences, abilities, interests. We work together best as a hive mind when we appreciate one another's contributions and just let it happen in an organic way.